felix123
Active Member
These gaps you have listed are still enormous, and the point being made here is that there are no plans on the books to build any other subway lines in the core. If we compare to NYC, Berlin, London, Paris, Tokyo, Seoul, etc etc, we see that most of these networks don't follow a grid. You're right on that point.
On the other hand, what all of those networks do offer are rapid transit trips to nearly all sections of their cores. And because I travel extensively for work, I use these systems quite frequently and find that the toughest adjustment when I return home is how comparatively long transit trips take in TO. So again, the issue isn't that the OL won't be an improvement, it's simply that on its own it won't be enough of an improvement for the core of a city that deserves much better, faster connectivity.
On the other hand, what all of those networks do offer are rapid transit trips to nearly all sections of their cores. And because I travel extensively for work, I use these systems quite frequently and find that the toughest adjustment when I return home is how comparatively long transit trips take in TO. So again, the issue isn't that the OL won't be an improvement, it's simply that on its own it won't be enough of an improvement for the core of a city that deserves much better, faster connectivity.